Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice Clinical Trial
"Nuestras Historias" curriculum is a tablet-based digital story curriculum that was created through community-based participatory methods. It uses narrative videos to teach about local prenatal health issues in the Parinari District of Peru. This study aims to assess the impact of "Nuestras Historias" on pregnant women and their partners by measuring participants' changes in prenatal health knowledge, attitudes and behavioral intentions for pregnancy and birth after exposure to the curriculum. The study uses a cluster-randomized design, in which communities were match-paired and then randomized for pregnant women/partners to receive the "Nuestras Historias" curriculum vs. standard prenatal health teaching, delivered by local community health workers.
Background and Study Setting: Parinari is a district in the Loreto region that has 30 communities with approximately 7264 people. The communities are very dispersed and only accessible by river. Inhabitants of this district do not have access to running water, electricity or sanitation and the majority live in poverty. Our study takes place in the 13 communities of Parinari where the Mama River project operated. Mama River selects community health workers (CHWs) who are able to use smartphones in these communities and trains them on the use of smartphones to collect information of new pregnancies, deliveries, alarms signs or deaths of pregnant women or newborns. CHWs then send this information via mobile phone to local health care providers. CHWs are also all trained in the delivery of verbal MCH educational messages to pregnant women, and perform home visits and group visits throughout pregnancies. Methods: Twelve communities (6 intervention, 6 control) were recruited and after a final evaluation we excluded two communities, as one had no pregnant women at time of study initiation. The remaining communities were divided into 5 pairs, where the two within the pair were similar in terms of overall population, distance from a health center, and number of pregnant women. One community in each pair was randomly assigned to the intervention group received the Mama River programming along with the digital story curriculum, and the other community to the control group, which received only the standard existing program with no digital stories. The community agents in the five communities selected for the intervention received training on how to use and show the digital stories on solar-powered tablets. During the recruitment phase, all pregnant women identified by Mama River were recruited into the trial, with an effort to also recruit their partners. All trial participants signed an informed consent prior to participating, and then completed the pre-intervention survey instrument that measured prenatal health knowledge, attitudes, and behavioral intentions for pregnancy and birth. Then, in the intervention communities, the participants received home visits and attended group meetings with the community agent in which the digital story curriculum was shown and discussed. In the control communities, participants also received home visits and attended group meetings, but the community agents carried on their standard of practice without the digital stories. One month after completing the pre-survey, participants completed a post-survey. Those in the intervention group had a slightly longer survey including a short quantitative questions regarding their reactions to the digital stories. ;
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